President of the Trinidad and Tobago's Umpires Council Lalman Kowlessar has condemned comments made by manager of Premier League team Lluma Esmeralda, Rafi Ali, which suggested that they have been unfavorably treated by match officials in their debut season at the highest level of the local game. Kowlessar, who is also first vice president of the T&T Cricket Board, said he flatly disagreed with Ali who he claimed was of the opinion that there was a clique of umpires working together to ensure certain teams win in the Premier League. "Nothing could be further from the truth. I believe that this gentleman shows all the qualities of a sore loser and is trying to blame others for the shortcomings of his own team," said Kowlessar. He said as president of the T&TUC he stood solidly behind and strongly supported the umpires who he described as doing a fantastic job to uphold the laws of the game without recognition.
"It is a very stressful job and like any other person in a pressure situation, mistakes will be made because we are all human. But to remotely suggest that umpires are taking sides while officiating is ludicrous," said Kowlessar, a retired Presentation College, Chaguanas history master and school team cricket coach. "It was even suggested that umpires are being bribed but our own investigations have shown that the accusations are not true. In fact we commend one umpire who literally chased officials from a certain club who went to his house to get him to make certain decisions in a match," said Kowlessar. He said after serving the game for more than four decades he was pained to hear of the comments made by Ali which he suggested was doing a great disservice to umpires and the future conduct of the game.
Kowlessar called for some measure of disclipinary action to be taken against Ali and said he has been approached by some of his members to take unilateral sanctions to protest the Esmeralda manager's unsubstantiated criticisms. The top umpires' official said he has full confidence in his members and decried the image most people have for the officials as being former cricketers who remain in the game after their playing days are over. Kowlessar said it was stretching the imagination somewhat when an official can sit overlooking midwicket and determine that a batsman is out Leg Before Wicket. He revealed that the T&TUC has embarked on a programme to recruit more umpires especially in the Under-35 age group and are educating their membership to keep up with the highest standards of the game and the rapidly evolving technology. He said the level of officiating in the recent Premiership T20 Festival at Guaracara Park in Pointe-a-Pierre was of the highest standard and umpires can hold their head high and take their place among their colleagues anywhere in the world. Kowlessar also dispelled suggestions that umpires on duty at the T20 Festival were not properly qualified. "All umpires were vetted by the Umpires Council and were more than qualified to take their place in the middle," said Kowlessar.